By Taylor Sisk
Staff Writer
Pittsboro — Gary Phillips recalls a march held in 2006 in support of granting citizenship to illegal immigrants. The march began as a group of some 2,000, he said, and as they moved through neighborhoods toward the courthouse that number had doubled as Latinos gathered the courage to join, coming out of “basements and businesses.â€
“They were invisible people made visible,†said Phillips, a Silk Hope resident and former Chatham County commissioner. “It was one of the most powerful experiences of my life.â€
Last Monday evening was a similar such occasion.
That evening, as the Chatham County Board of Commissioners meeting was called to order, it was announced that due to the fact that 35 people had signed up to speak, the customary 30-minute public input session held at the beginning of each commissioners’ meeting would be extended to 90.
The large upstairs room in the superior courthouse was filled to capacity, the walls lined to their length. What had brought the majority of these folks out was an announcement that the commissioners would hear comments concerning a resolution they had passed declining participation in the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) 287(g) program. The program is formally called the Agreements of Cooperation in Communities to Enhance Safety and Security (ICE ACCESS) and provides money to local law-enforcement agencies to help identify illegal immigrants and process them for deportation.
The commissioners’ resolution is nonbinding – Sheriff Richard Webster could still choose to participate. He’s remained quiet on the issue. But the county isn’t presently qualified to participate in 287(g). It would first require a larger jail.
If Monday night’s commissioners’ meeting is the measure, the majority of Chatham County residents supports the resolution against participation, and applauds the commissioners’ courage in passing it. Of the 35 or so citizens who spoke, four were in opposition to the resolution (two spoke on other issues). In the course of these comments, the words of Shakespeare, Twain, Lincoln, Jesus, God, Shirley Chisholm and an anonymous radio comedian were invoked. Words from the inscription on the Statue of Liberty (“Give me your tired, your poor/Your huddled masses …â€) were twice spoken. Speakers on both sides of the issue were articulate and almost unfailingly polite.
As Pittsboro resident Pam Cash-Roper described her opposition — questioning whether there had been reports from Latinos of abuse by local law enforcement and whether families had been separated by 287(g) — several voices from the gallery responded that yes, in fact, there had been. Cash-Roper paused in her comments, requested that she be allowed to say her piece; commission chair George Lucier asked for order and no further outbursts ensued.
Cash-Roper – a lifelong Republican who spoke at the Democratic National Convention, telling of the crippling medical costs she and her husband have encountered, then enthusiastically endorsing Barack Obama – said that while she opposed 287(g), she also opposed the resolution.
“If we do not even qualify for 287(g), then why do we have this resolution?†she asked.
Cash-Roper said that comprehensive immigration reform is what is needed, “not a resolution that divides this county.†She said that she believed more citizens should have been allowed to provide input before the resolution was passed.
Hate mail
A larger contingent of those who oppose the resolution had been expected at Monday night’s meeting. Commissioners had reported receiving hate mail.
According to an email sent out by Esther Coleman, director of the county’s Human Relations Commission: “I have very good reason to believe that several groups identified by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) as hate groups are fueling some of the communications that the Commissioners are receiving.â€
In response, emails were circulating across Chatham County in the days leading up to the meeting, calling on those who support the resolution to turn out in numbers.
They did. The resonance of applause for the more passionate speakers confirmed a clearly pro-resolution crowd.
Several speakers had arrived with statistics to back their claims.
Marty Rosenbluth of the Durham-based Southern Coalition for Social Justice said that 287(g) fails to do what it purports to do: apprehend and deport felons. According to Rosenbluth’s comments, and information posted on the coalition’s website, between January and September 2008 some 3,000 people went through removal proceedings. Of those, 56 percent were charged with vehicle violations.
Del Turner of Gulf said that ICE was appropriately named for its “cold treatment†of immigrants.
ICE, which is an agency of the Department of Homeland Security, has “itself assumed the role of a terrorist organization,†Turner said, in that it targets immigrants and breaks apart families.
Implicit in the comments of many was recognition of the inevitable. Chatham County today has one of the largest Latino populations in the state. Despite any measure, that population will almost certainly continue to grow, and, under current immigration policy, not all will arrive legally.
“When your bellies are growling and your children are crying,†said Tim Keim of Pittsboro, “a line on a map means nothing.â€
Paul Cuadros is a professor of journalism at UNC and author of the book A Home on the Field: How One Championship Team Inspires Hope for the Revival of Small Town America about his experience coaching Jordan-Matthews High School’s Latino men’s soccer team to a state championship. He called upon students and graduates of the high school in the audience to stand. These included a young man who’s a Morehead-Cain Scholarship finalist and a young woman at North Carolina A&T who plans to become an FBI agent.
“This is the future of our county,†said Cuadros.
“I’m so proud of Chatham County and so proud of the people gathered here tonight,†Phillips said. “Ms. Roper,†he added, turning to Cash-Roper, who’d spoken against the resolution, “I’m proud of you too – proud of your strength and your openness.â€
After all speakers had been heard, Lucier read a list of nine reasons the commission had adopted the resolution, first among them being that since joining would require a new jail, participation would be costly.
“We’d rather build schools than jails,†Lucier said.
Additional reasons cited by Lucier were that joining would take resources away from other anti-crime measures that have proved effective, such as anti-gang programs; that evidence suggests that participation increases the incidence of racial profiling; and that the county must “honor†its diversity.
Phillips later called Lucier’s comments – which were read on behalf of all commissioners – “a very brave statement.â€
In a Tuesday interview, Lucier reinforced the role that the encouragement of diversity played in the commission’s decision: “It’s important to embrace that diversity and not be afraid of it. One reason why we passed this resolution was to reflect this reality.â€
Gary Phillips recalls that day in 2006 when the invisible became visible:
“Now I see more and more people [in Chatham County] becoming more visible.â€
I applaud the C.C. Commissioners and all the speakers for their honesty, wisdom and desire to act “with justice for all.”
I feel there was not proper notice for what turned into a “public hearing” for the resolution in Chatham County, I have had many people who have spoken to me about this resolution and are NOT FOR IT. As, I see the commissioners of our county were secretive and extreme in their resolution to stop any cooperation with the federal government immigration laws. We need to have MORE public input into the stopping of Criminal Elements in our county. This is only justice for the criminal not the citizen.